A friend of mine got a legal notice about city taxes he owed & asked me about a word in it. "Distraint". Never heard of it, myself, just constraint and restraint. Anyone have a clue what this affixion of the "-straint" root means?
Wow. I hope I never come in contact with that word, which means: "the seizure and holding of property as security for payment of a debt or satisfaction of a claim." He doesn't live in a friendly city, does he?
It almost makes me wonder if they didn't use the word on purpose, thinking he'd not know it and lose his property!
Not quite as complimentary as you may think, shufitz. Easier to ask a smart friend when you see him more often than you go to the library.
Then again, maybe it is a compliment to me. A lot of my long-time friends don't have their own dictionaries (let alone good ones). Obviously, that's because they rely on me! <cough, choke, cough>
[Edit: Yipes! Almost forgot -- thanks for the clarification Kalleh. Rude of me not to acknowledge the help I specifically asked for. Chalk it up to worry for my friend's situation.]